Repeat-flower rose care
Amateur Gardening|June 26, 2021
You need the right varieties and careful nurturing if you want to enjoy consistent multiple blooms with repeat-flowering roses, says Anne Swithinbank
Anne Swithinbank
Repeat-flower rose care
A GARDEN full of rose blooms is easy to achieve in June and July, but what happens next depends on both their ancestry and the care they receive. Many have the capacity to flower continuously or in flushes, and it is not unusual to find a few precious buds half-open and frosted with ice crystals come midwinter. Others are destined to flower brilliantly just the once and no more buds will appear until the following summer.

Roses have a long and colourful history, with fossil records proving they were around over 35 million years ago. Their cultivation probably started in China, and they were used and appreciated by the ancient civilisations of Greece, Egypt and Rome.

The roses first grown in Europe were almost certainly fragrant Gallicas, of which the apothecaries rose (Rosa gallica var. officinalis), thought to be the ‘Red Rose of Lancashire’, is one. They were joined by groups known as Alba and Damask, but most of these early roses flowered only once, in summer.

By the late 1700s repeat-flowering roses arrived in Europe from China and breeding work gave rise to the Bourbons, climbing noisettes, hybrid perpetuals and finally hybrid teas and floribundas.

Choosing is quite a challenge

So now we have a fabulous range of old-fashioned and new repeat-flowering roses, some shrubby, some upright and bushy, and others climbing or rambling. There are over 2,000 roses available in the UK and choosing favourites for our gardens is quite a challenge.

This story is from the June 26, 2021 edition of Amateur Gardening.

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This story is from the June 26, 2021 edition of Amateur Gardening.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.